“In Egypt, for instance, the president’s pay shot up from a paltry $280 per month, put in place by the austere Mohammed Morsy administration, to $5,900 per month just before General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi predictably won an election,” it states.
The source says that some leaders take a disproportionate share of the national income for their personal use.
“In Morocco, the Treasury spends, by one account, $1 million a day for King Mohammed VI’s 12 royal palaces and 30 private residences. That is on top of $7.7 million spent on an entourage of royal automobiles, and a monthly salary of $40,000 paid to the monarch,” the estimates show.
According to the analysis some presidents have deceptively small
salaries but have, personally or through family members, massive control
over their countries’ resources.
The source says:
“For example, President Eduardo dos Santos has a modest monthly salary of $5,000 but is widely believed to control a lot of the wealth produced from Angola’s oil-industry, and his family members own some of the biggest enterprises in the country.”
Here are the 10 Highest Paid African Presidents according to Africa Review:
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